The client diagnosed with a mild concussion is being discharged from the emergency department. Which discharge instruction should the nurse teach the client's significant other?
- A. Awaken the client every two (2) hours.
- B. Monitor for increased intracranial pressure (ICP).
- C. Observe frequently for hypervigilance.
- D. Offer the client food every three (3) to four (4) hours.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: For a mild concussion, monitoring for worsening neurological status is key. Awakening every 2 hours (A) allows assessment for altered consciousness. Monitoring ICP (B) is complex and not feasible at home, hypervigilance (C) is not typical, and frequent feeding (D) is unnecessary.
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The nurse arrives at the site of a one-car motor-vehicle accident and stops to render aid. The driver of the car is unconscious. After stabilizing the client's cervical spine, which action should the nurse take next?
- A. Carefully remove the driver from the car.
- B. Assess the client's pupils for reaction.
- C. Assess the client's airway.
- D. Attempt to wake the client up by shaking him.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: After cervical spine stabilization, ensuring a patent airway (C) is the next priority to support oxygenation. Removing the driver (A) risks further injury, pupil assessment (B) is secondary, and shaking (D) could worsen spinal injury.
The client is undergoing post-thrombolytic therapy for a stroke. The health-care provider has ordered heparin to be infused at 1,000 units per hour. The solution comes as 25,000 units of heparin in 500 mL of D5W. At what rate will the nurse set the pump?
Correct Answer: 20 mL/hr
Rationale: Calculate: (1,000 units/hr ÷ 25,000 units) × 500 mL = 20 mL/hr. The pump should be set to 20 mL/hr.
Spinal precautions are ordered for the client who sustained a neck injury during an MVA. The client has yet to be cleared that there is no cervical fracture. Which action is the nurse’s priority when receiving the client in the ED?
- A. Assessing the client using the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)
- B. Assessing the level of sensation in the client’s extremities
- C. Checking that the cervical collar was correctly placed by EMS
- D. Applying antiembolism hose to the client’s lower extremities
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The nurse should determine the neurological status using the GCS, but this is not the priority. The nurse should assess sensation status at intervals to determine neurological injury progression, but this is not the priority. Maintaining the correct placement of the cervical collar will keep the client’s head and neck in a neutral position and prevent further injury if a spinal fracture or SCI is present. Because ensuring that the cervical collar is correctly placed will prevent further injury, it is priority. Applying antiembolism hose is an intervention to prevent thromboembolic complications, but this is not the priority.
Which type of precautions should the nurse implement for the client diagnosed with septic meningitis?
- A. Standard Precautions.
- B. Airborne Precautions.
- C. Contact Precautions.
- D. Droplet Precautions.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Meningococcal meningitis is transmitted via respiratory droplets, requiring Droplet Precautions (D) in addition to Standard Precautions. Airborne (B) and Contact (C) are not indicated.
Which response by the nurse would be best to prevent distress when the client repeatedly asks, 'Where is my mother?'
- A. Explain to the client, 'Your mother died several years ago.'
- B. Tell the client, 'Your mother will visit later.'
- C. State, 'You miss your mother. What was she like?'
- D. Ask the client, 'When did you last see your mother?'
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Redirecting the conversation to memories of the mother validates the client's feelings without causing distress from confronting reality.
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